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MILAN — Ilia Malinin didn’t want to skate the long program in the Olympic figure skating team competition. He wanted to rest up for the more important individual men’s event beginning Tuesday. His coaches felt the same way. It was a definite no. 

But when U.S. Figure Skating called upon him late Saturday night, saying the event was going to be too close and potentially lost without him, he had no choice but to say yes.

It turned out to be the best decision of his young career.

On a night in which the Olympic team competition finally arrived as a major event after three underwhelming attempts in 2014, 2018 and 2022, Malinin saved the United States from an embarrassing final-day collapse and delivered the Americans the well-earned gold medal. 

“Absolutely, this is definitely the smartest decision I’ve made,” Malinin told USA TODAY Sports during an exclusive interview after the medal ceremony. “I got a chance to just really feel the ice, feel the environment, just feel the atmosphere. I’m just so proud of everyone and myself for what we put out there tonight.

‘This definitely is one of the happiest days of my life, and really just sets me up in the right mood and mindset for the next days to come.”

The 21-year-old self-proclaimed “Quad God” was backstage when the scores of the only man who could beat him, Japan’s Shun Sato, popped onto the big screen in the Olympic figure skating venue. Malinin’s long program score was 200.03 points. 

Sato’s? 194.86. Malinin had done it. The Americans had won. 

At that moment, Malinin came running from behind the curtains to celebrate with his teammates in the rink-side team boxes. But he didn’t just dash to them — he dove into the cheering collection of happy Americans, his arms raised high. He was lifted off his feet. He was flying. This was the image of the athlete in triumph. He would worry about how much this took out of him for the individual event on another day. This was the highlight of his already stellar young career.

This is the second consecutive Olympic gold medal for the United States in the team event. Ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates, who won both of their team competitions, are the only Americans to repeat as champions. Last time, they had to wait two and a half years to receive their medals due to the excruciating long investigation of the Kamila Valieva doping scandal. This time, they got them right away.

The final night in the three-day competition showed that this is a test of wills, and skating skills, but it’s also basic math. As the evening began, the United States carried a five-point lead over Japan into the final three long programs: pairs, women and men. 

The evening started off well for the Americans, who gained an unexpected point when pairs team Ellie Kam and Danny O’Shea finished fourth, not fifth, in the pairs long program. The little things mattered on this night.

That became evident when three-time U.S. champion Amber Glenn turned in a nervous and underwhelming performance to finish third, two places behind Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto. All of a sudden the competition was tied with just one discipline left, the men’s long program. Had Kam and O’Shea not gained that extra point, Japan would have taken the lead. 

And then it came down to what most Olympic figure skating competitions are all about: one skater against another. Ilia Malinin against Shun Sato. Malinin won last year’s world championships, his second in a row. Sato was sixth. Sato was replacing countryman Yuma Kagiyama, who defeated a shaky Malinin in the short program Saturday night.

Both men rose to the occasion; Malinin just did a little bit more. “Ilia was spot on with what he needed to do,” said 1988 Olympic champion Brian Boitano, co-host of USA TODAY’s Milan Magic podcast. 

To think that deciding battle might never have happened had Malinin not said yes to skating the long program. 

But he did.

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MILAN — Amber Glenn said she ‘couldn’t believe the outlandish backlash’ she received for speaking out about LGBTQ issues in the United States.

The first-time Olympian figure skater revealed her feelings about the response to her comments after Team USA won team event gold on Sunday, Feb. 8.

‘I couldn’t believe the outlandish backlash I received for just supporting people,’ she said. ‘Of course, I have people supporting me, and I’m not online right now because of it, but I’m gonna keep speaking my truth. I’m gonna keep representing what I believe in and what I think all Americans believe in, which is freedom and being able to love and do what you want. So, I just I hope we can keep going forward and be positive.’

After her performance in the free skate, Glenn said she has ‘never had so many people wish me harm before.’

“That was really disappointing, and I do think it kind of lowered that excitement for this,’ she added.

Glenn, who is part of the LGBTQ community, is an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ rights and mental health awareness. Given her advocacy, she was asked by reporters ahead of the Games on Wednesday, Feb. 4 about President Donald Trump’s approach to the LGBTQ community. Her response was that “it’s been a hard time for the community overall.”

“It isn’t the first time that we’ve had to come together as a community and try and fight for our human rights,” she said. “Now especially, it’s not just affecting the queer community, but many other communities, and I think that we are able to support each other in a way that we didn’t have to before, and because of that, it’s made us a lot stronger.’

She added she wanted to use her platform during the Winter Olympics to encourage people ‘to stay strong in these hard times.”

“I know that a lot of people say you’re just an athlete, like, stick to your job, shut up about politics, but politics affect us all,” Glenn said. “It is something that I will not just be quiet about, because it is something that affects us in our everyday lives. So, of course, there are things that I disagree with, but as a community, we are strong and we support each other, and brighter days are ahead.”

Glenn posted a response on her Instagram story on Saturday, Feb. 7 regarding the reception to what she said.

“When I chose to utilize one of the amazing things about the United States of America (Freedom of speech) to convey how I feel as an athlete competing for Team USA in a troubling time for many Americans I am now receiving a scary amount of hate/threats for simply using my voice WHEN ASKED about how I feel. I did anticipate this but I am disappointed by it. I will be limiting my time on social media for my own wellbeing for now but I will never stop using my voice for what I truly believe in,” she wrote.

Glenn isn’t the only U.S. Olympian to speak on representing Team USA and the political climate in the country; Alysa Liu, hockey star Hilary Knight, freestyle halfpipe skier Hunter Hess and aerials freestyle skier Chris Lillis all have.

Trump specifically called out Hess in a social media post, labeling him as a ‘real loser.” Vice President JD Vance has attended events in Milano Cortina, including the opening ceremony, where he was booed.

Despite the unsatisfactory showing, Glenn said she didn’t think the comments had anything to do with her performance.

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MILAN ― Lindsey Vonn broke her leg during the women’s downhill event Sunday, Feb. 8 at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Vonn, who was skiing on a torn ACL, crashed after her arm hooked a gate.

U.S. Ski said Vonn is in stable condition. She was treated by a multidisciplinary team and “underwent an orthopedic operation to stabilize a fracture reported in her left leg,” the Ca’ Foncello hospital said in a statement to the AP.

“She’ll be OK, but it’s going to be a bit of a process,” Anouk Patty, chief of sport for U.S. Ski and Snowboard told AP. “This sport’s brutal and people need to remember when they’re watching (that) these athletes are throwing themselves down a mountain and going really, really fast.”

What happened to Lindsey Vonn?

Vonn hooked the fourth gate with her right arm, and it spun her off-balance. She fought to regain control, but her legs had already splayed and her weight quickly shifted to the back of her skis, pulling her backward. She fell to her right and then tumbled headfirst in the snow.

‘Things just happen so quick in this sport,’ U.S. teammate Bella Wright said after the race. ‘It looked like Lindsey had incredible speed out of that turn, and she hooked her arm and it’s just over just like that.’

The three-time Olympic medalist remained prone in the snow, and she could be heard wailing in pain. The gasps and groans from fans faded into shocked silence as medics worked on her. Vonn remained on the course for approximately 13 minutes before being loaded into a helicopter.

Follow our live file from Cortina on the day of the crash to read all the details.

Lindsey Vonn crash video

USA TODAY Sports’ Samantha Cardona-Norberg breaks down Linsdey Vonn’s crash just after it happened.

Is Lindsey Vonn OK?

Vonn was in obvious pain after the crash, but she was moving her arms, head and neck.

About 18 minutes after the crash, the helicopter slowly began flying toward Cortina. “Let’s let Lindsey Vonn hear us!” the American announcer said as the chopper flew away with her, and the crowd cheered and applauded.

Vonn’s sister Karin Kildow was at the course today for the downhill and spoke to NBC reporters during their live broadcast:

‘I mean that definitely was the last thing we wanted to see and it happened quick and when that happens, you’re just immediately hoping she’s okay. And it was scary because when you start to see the stretchers being put out, it’s not a good sign,’ Kildow said. ‘But she really … she just dared greatly and she put it all out there. So it’s really hard to see, but we just really hope she’s okay.

‘She does have all of her surgeons and her PT staff here and her doctors, so I’m sure they’ll give us a report and we’ll meet her at whatever hospital she’s at.’

Lindsey Vonn torn ACL

It was second time in as many weeks Vonn left a mountaintop on a chopper. She fully ruptured her left ACL, sustaining meniscus damage and bone bruising, in a downhill crash on Jan. 30, in the final World Cup event prior to the start of the Olympics.

Vonn is also skiing with a partial replacement of her right knee. She had dominated the sport before the crash, making the podium in all five downhill races this season and winning two of them.

Despite the latest injury, Vonn was determined to race at her fifth and final Olympics. She said her knee felt stable and strong, and she had spent the last week doing intense rehab, pool workouts, weight lifting and plyometrics. She skied both training runs, posting the third-fastest time in the second run before it was canceled because of fog and snow. 

How old is Lindsey Vonn

Vonn is 41 and was skiing in her fifth Winter Olympics (2002, 2006, 2010, 2018, 2026). She has won three Olympic medals (1 gold, 2 bronze).

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MILAN — Ilia Malinin secured gold for Team USA.

There was no Quad Axel from the ‘Quad God,’ but he pulled off a one-footed backflip that stunned the crowd and gave his country back-to-back team titles. The U.S. and Japan were tied for first place going into the final programs of the team event.

Malinin performed in the men’s free skate of the team event Sunday, Feb. 8. He decided to go for the Triple Axel instead and had a stumble that looked like might doom him. Instead, he powered through and delivered the sequence of the night with a quad salchow and triple axel, and then for good measure, did the backflip that brought everyone to their feet.

It was as strong of a finish as you can get, and he earned a whopping score of 200.03, with a 110.32 technical score and 89.71 points from the component. Japan’s Shun Sato closed the night with a score of 194.86 — technical score 106.49, component 88.37 ― giving Japan the silver medal.

Watch Olympic figure skating on Peacock

Malinin took the ice after Amber Glenn turned in a shaky performance for third place in the women’s free skate that required Malinin to beat out Japan’s Shun Sato for Team USA to take gold.

Malinin’s program is set to the song ‘The Ball’ by Asaf Avidan, ‘The Smell of the Sea’ by Alan Mayer and ‘Code Duello’ by Power-Haus and Sergiu-Dan Muresan.

These were the elements of Malinin’s for his free skate program:

  • Quad Flip
  • Triple Axel
  • Quad Lutz
  • Quad Loop
  • Change Foot Camel Spin 4
  • Step Sequence
  • Quad Lutz + Single Euler + Triple Flip
  • Quad Toeloop + Triple Toeloop
  • Quad Salchow + Triple Axel + Sequence
  • Choreo Sequence
  • Flying Sit Spin
  • Change Foot Combination Spin

This story will be updated with the results from Malinin’s performance.

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Super Bowl 60 took a brief break to become the Benito Bowl at halftime.

The New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks spent a longer than usual halftime likely going over what they could change in the second half of a defensive battle from Levi’s Stadium.

While they were talking things over, Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny took to the field for the Apple Music halftime show.

Bad Bunny took football fans through a brief run through some of hits like ‘Tití Me Preguntó’ and ‘BAILE INoLVIDABLE.’ He also welcomed some special guests to the field as Ricky Martin and Lady Gaga performed with the Grammy Award-winning artist.

He closed with ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS’ – the title track from his most recent album. Performers carrying flags from many countries flocked to a side of the field with him.

In the final number, Bad Bunny spiked a football in the end zone to make way for the second half of Super Bowl 60. Fans may have missed a specific message on the football. Here’s what to know:

What did Bad Bunny’s football say?

He rotated the football towards the closest camera at the end zone with the message ‘Together, We Are America.’

Bad Bunny setlist

Here’s the full list of songs he performed during the halftime show:

  • ‘Tití Me Preguntó’
  • ‘Yo Perreo Sola’
  • ‘Safaera’
  • ‘Party’
  • ‘Voy a Llevarte Pa’ PR’
  • ‘EoO’
  • ‘Monaco’
  • ‘Die with a Smile’ feat. Lady Gaga
  • ‘BAILE INoLVIDABLE’
  • NUEVAYoL’
  • ‘LO QUE LE PASÓ A HAWAii’ feat. Ricky Martin
  • ‘El Apagón’
  • ‘Café Con Ron’
  • ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS’
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The Seattle Seahawks not only are champions of Super Bowl 60 … they finally have a measure of revenge for Super Bowl 49.

In 2015, with the Seahawks one yard from a go-ahead touchdown in the final 30 seconds, the New England Patriots intercepted Russell Wilson and denied Seattle its second straight Super Bowl championship.

But with their 29-13 victory in Super Bowl 60, the Seahawks became the 17th franchise with at least two Super Bowl championships.

You can celebrate the glory of the Seahawks’ return to the mountaintop with page prints from USA TODAY Sports. These are keepsakes that will last a lifetime, are a must for longtime and new Seahawks fans, and make the perfect gift for the Seahawks fanatic in your life.

Buy our postgame page printBuy our stadium edition page print

Check out the lineup from USA TODAY Sports.

Our commemorative page prints

Right after the championship game, we started working on a commemorative page print celebrating the Seahawks’ victory over New England. Come back in the wee hours — or after sunrise — to see something that will amaze and delight Patriots fans for decades.

Buy our postgame commemorative page print

“CHAMPIONS!” is a true collector’s item. This page print served as the front and back covers of a four-page newspaper printed for limited distribution at Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. Did you catch it on TV? In the winning team’s locker room? On social media?

Page prints come on high-quality art paper, in a variety of sizes and start at $27 (plus shipping and tax) through the USA TODAY Store. For more details, go to usatodaystore.com and search “Seahawks.”

Buy our postgame page print Buy our stadium edition page print

Championship gear

Looking for Seahawks championship hats, T-shirts and more? Fanatics is among the excellent options for championship gear.

Check out Fanatics merch

Contact Gene Myers at gmyers@usatodayco.com. Check out books and page prints from the USA TODAY Network — including books about recent football championships by the Philadelphia Eagles, Indiana Hoosiers and Ohio State Buckeyes, tribute books to Bob Uecker, Lee Corso and Dale Earnhardt Sr., championship books about the Los Angeles Dodgers, Oklahoma City Thunder, Florida Panthers and Florida Gators, and “Coach Steve’s Youth Sports Survival Guide.”

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — This was always the risk Lindsey Vonn was willing to take.

She knew skiing at these Olympics was a gamble, as likely to end in pain and disappointment as in glory and gold. But life favors the bold. Whatever her physical injuries are now, that pain and those scars will eventually fade.

Regrets and what ifs last forever.                                                                                                                                        

But there was a horrifying numbness to it, too, knowing that a story that’s captivated so many was not going to end triumphantly or even happily. Vonn had brought everyone along on her ride, giving the mere mortals among us a glimpse of what it’s like to live life with abandon. And now it was done.

“She just dared greatly and she put it all out there,” Vonn’s sister, Karin Kildow, told NBC after the crash.

“She always goes 110%. There’s never anything less,” Kildow added. “So I know she put her whole heart into it, and sometimes just like things happen.”

When we’re kids, we charge at life head-first because we don’t know any better. The world is one of endless possibilities, where we really can be an astronaut or a superhero.

Or an Olympic champion.

For most of us, though, that fearlessness fades. Our audaciousness is tempered by consequences and repercussions. By the mundane responsibilities that come with growing up. We learn to live with good rather than dreaming of great.

Not Vonn.

Part of her appeal has always been her refusal to give up or accept defeat. Vonn has endured injuries and heartbreaks too many to count, and she keeps coming back for more. Tell her she can’t do something, and she’ll work two, three, four times as hard. Suggest something is not a good idea, and she takes it as a challenge.

She lives life on her terms, uninterested in someone else’s constraints.

“It’s kind of the way we operated as a family. We always wanted to do the best that we could and we had always high ambitions for ourselves,” Vonn said last fall.

“And I think it’s also a lot easier for yourself if you reframe everything in a way that gives you the power,” Vonn added. “I don’t like external pressure in the sense that I’m doing something for somebody else. I’m doing it for me, and I’m driven by my own aspirations.”

It’s why she was on this mountain in the first place.

But her decision to retire in 2019 was not really a choice. Her body was broken down, her right knee, in particular, ravaged from her many injuries. So when she felt better than she had in decades after a partial replacement of her right knee in April 2024, Vonn decided to give ski racing a go again.

And so many of us cheered it because we were living vicariously through her, having the guts to do something we wanted without caring what anyone else thought or worrying about what could go wrong. Vonn was living in the moment, and she was doing it at full volume.

Even after a crash nine days ago left her with a torn ACL, bone bruising and meniscus damage in her left knee, Vonn was undaunted.

The easy thing would have been to head home and recuperate, accepting that maybe it wasn’t meant to be. But where’s the fun in that? Why not at least try?

Maybe she’d succeed. Maybe she’d fail. Maybe she’d end somewhere in between.

But she’d never have to wonder.

“I will race tomorrow in my final Olympic Downhill and while I can’t guarantee a good result, I can guarantee I will give it everything I have,” Vonn wrote in an Instagram post the night before the race.

“But no matter what happens, I have already won.”

Yes, Lindsey Vonn crashed. In spectacular fashion. But at least she was brave enough to take the risk, which is more than most of us can ever say.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy —The No. 1 rule in sports journalism is no cheering or jeering in the press box.

More than a Dozen of reporters with more than a century of experience covering America’s most revered and reviled athletes and coaches crammed into the mixed zone at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Center Sunday for Lindsey Vonn’s final downhill race at a Winter Olympics. She left the starting gate at high noon. And about 13 seconds later, her right arm hooked the fourth gate, spun her off balance, and sent her head first into the snow.

Every journalist in the mixed zone gasped in horror. They couldn’t help but react.

And neither could anyone else on the mountain. Fans, coaches, Olympic volunteers, Vonn’s competitors. Everyone panicked. Audibly. They grimaced and groaned, covering their eyes and mouths as they saw Vonn’s terrifying tumble on the jumbotron.

While Vonn’s harrowing cries haunted those watching on TV at home, the finish area in Cortina fell silent. Deafeningly so.

Sympathetic applause followed several taut minutes later, as everyone on the mountain waited for the medical helicopter to come. For the second time in nine days, Vonn had to be airlifted to a hospital. 

‘It looked like Lindsey had incredible speed out of that turn, and then she hooked her arm, and it’s just over. Just like that,” American teammate Bella Wright said. “After all the preparation, after years of hard work and rehabilitation and all the things, it’s the last thing you want to see somebody go through. It’s the last thing you want to see for Lindsey. But she should be really proud of everything that she has gone through to get back here.”

Vonn made a miraculous comeback within a miraculous comeback to ski in these Winter Games. After coming out of retirement to become world No. 1 in the downhill at age 41, she tore her ACL in a crash at the World Cup run in Crans Montana on Jan. 30. On Tuesday, she announced her intention to compete.

Olympic legend Shaun White said before the Games he couldn’t remember an Olympic story of such magnitude since Kerri Strug’s iconic vault in 1996. Strug’s broken-ankle performance made her a media darling in 1996. But that response has since been relitigated and ruled irresponsible.

Similarly, Vonn was hurrahed and hissed for her decision to ski injured. Naysayers couldn’t believe she’d set such a poor example for young athletes by sacrificing her body in such a way.

But Vonn isn’t an 18-year-old gymnast. And there were no infamous Romanian coaches who pressured her into racing. She is an adult. Who loves skiing. She already sat out one Olympics due to injury (2014). But she wanted 2026 to be where she ended her career on her terms, not because her body forced her to be done.

Vonn retired, reluctantly, in 2019. “My body is broken beyond repair,” she said at the time. But after six years in the valley and a partial right knee replacement, Vonn returned to World Cup racing in 2024. The surgery allowed her to get back into competition shape and return to the summit – yes, of the mountain, but also of her sport.  

Vonn has podiumed at every downhill race this season and won two of them. She finished in the top three twice in a trio of super-G events she raced as well. Vonn’s stellar results allowed her to meet the U.S. Skiing Olympic qualifying criteria in December.

She is widely regarded as the greatest speed skier of all time. And she was determined to punctuate her resume with an individual Olympic medal.

Instead, she left Tofona strapped to the side of a canary yellow chopper with three nasty letters by her name: DNF. (Did not finish).

American Breezy Johnson raced sixth, seven spots ahead of Vonn. The eventual gold-medal winner saw her teammate crash from the hot seat, wide-eyed with her hand over her mouth in shock.

“I can’t imagine the pain that she’s going through,” Johnson said. “And it’s not the physical pain. We can deal with physical pain. But the emotional pain is something else. And I wish her the best, and I hope that this isn’t the end.”

As Vonn flew overhead, the finish line announcer rallied the crowd: “Putting it all on the line, Lindsey Vonn, the queen of Cortina, you will be missed … Everybody up on your feet, so she can hear you.’

Triumphant cheers followed, much louder than the tepid applause from about 15 minutes earlier when Vonn first left her skis. 

Italian Sophia Goggia, who went 15th en route to a bronze medal, wished Vonn a quick recovery. She and Vonn are also good friends. When Goggia won silver in Beijing 23 days after fracturing her fibula and partially tearing her ACL on a downhill run in Cortina, Vonn was the first person she video called after the ceremony.

It is not yet known the severity of Vonn’s injury. Her wails could have stemmed from physical pain, anguish over the accident or a chilling combination of both. U.S. Skiing said she is stable and being treated by Italian and American doctors.

Johnson said she received word that Vonn was cheering her on from the helicopter. American Jackie Wiles, who finished fourth from the 17th start position, said she knew Vonn would’ve wanted her and Wright (who went 24th) to stay in the race. But Wiles said it was hard to go down the mountain after watching her friend and teammate go out like that.

“We have such a sisterhood. I mean, we travel with each other on the road. We’re a family,’ Wiles said. ‘And to watch someone that you care about so much, it really sucks. And my heart kind of just broke for her in that moment.”

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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How would you rate Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl 60 halftime show? For several professional athletes, sports teams and sports media sites, the show was a hit.

Various figures from around the sports world gave their reactions on social media throughout the show’s runtime in Santa Clara, California. Many expressed excitement about the Boricua singer’s performance, with a few referring to Bad Bunny by his given name, Benito.

Among those reacting to the halftime spectacle were New Orleans Saints defensive end Cam Jordan, New York Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson and ESPN personality Pat McAfee.

Here’s a look at a few reactions to Bad Bunny’s halftime show from around the wide world of sports:

Sports world reacts to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl 60 halftime show

See which athletes, teams and other sports-focused accounts reacted to Bad Bunny’s halftime show, which also featured Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin:

Translated into English, the Seahawks’ post reads: ‘Much more than an artist. A voice that represents millions. Thank you Benito.’

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Watch and rate every Super Bowl commercial

Since 1989, USA TODAY Ad Meter has awarded the best commercial from the big game – and we need your help.

Sign up and rate every national commercial from the 2026 Super Bowl, from familiar favorites like Budweiser and Pepsi to AI and pharma start-ups. Budweiser won last year’s contest and was back with a patriotic ad this year features a Clydesdale horse and a bald eagle.

The cost for a Super Bowl ad topped $10 million for the first time in 2026 with the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks facing off at Levi’s Stadium.

Ad Meter: Help decide the best commercial

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